Hazel Lee, Chinese-American heroine

(Not Chinese Air Force, strictly speaking, but not through any fault of hers!)
Hazel Ying Lee was born in Portland, Oregon, in 1912. She graduated high
school in 1929 and soon thereafter got her pilot's certificate from a
Portland flight school, this at a time when only 1 percent of pilots were
women and even fewer were minorities. In 1933, when the provicinal
government of Canton set out to build an air force, she joined fourteen
other Chinese-Americans to serve their ancestral country. They included
Arthur Chin, who became the CAF's leading ace with nine air-to-air
victories--hence America's first combat ace of the Second World War,
broadly defined. Another volunteer was Clifford Louie Yim-Quin, who
became a general in the CAF, chief executive officer of China Airlines,
and Hazel Lee's husband.

Several of the men were accepted for service. Lee was not, but she
stayed in China for a few years as a civilian pilot, returning to the
United States in 1938. Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, she
volunteered for the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) who would ferry
aircraft from factory to air base and overseas. As the story is told,
she once
crash landed in a Kansas field, where the mistook her for an invading
Japanese and chased her around the aircraft with a pitch fork until she
identified herself and put him at ease.

On November 10, 1944, Lee set out to deliver a P-63 Supercobra from
the Bell Aircraft factory in Niagara Falls, New York, to Great Falls,
Montana, when it would be flown on to the Soviet Union for service in
the Red Air Force. Accounts different, but on landing at Great Falls,
two of the fighters collided. Lee was pulled from her P-63 with her
flight jacket in flames, burned so badly she would not recover. She died
two later. Three days after that, the Lee family received the telegram
informing their son Victor had been killed in action in Europe. She
was the 38th and final WASP to die on active duty.

The WASP were regarded as civilians, hence not eligible for military
honors and benefits. (The oversight was remedied in
1979, when the WASP were finally granted military status.) If not for
that, the Lee family would have been a two Gold Star family for their
losses in the Second World War. China's loss was America's gain.